Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Up on the high wire

- off Medicaid to make that program more efficient. Hutchinson’s declared position is that the House bill is a good starting place but a terrible ending place. He says the House should go ahead and move the process along to get the bill to the U.S. Senate

Gov. Asa Hutchinson’s position on the U.S. House Republican health-care bill is that it is terrible and that it is fine.

“You’re giving me a false choice there, Todd,” the governor said last week to NBC’s Chuck Todd. The newsman was trying to get Hutchinson to say whether Arkansas would be better off with the status quo than the House measure.

What Hutchinson was attempting was to be a good and pragmatic Arkansas governor and a good and pragmatic contempora­ry Arkansas Republican at the same time.

It’s what his entire Arkansas gubernator­ial essence is attempting.

He says that’s not a false choice. But it’s at least a circus trick.

dingbat, please

Hutchinson says the House healthcare bill would ill-serve Arkansas. He sounds a bit like John Kasich in speaking the truth that the bill would harm low-income persons by capping Medicaid and failing to give states the resources and flexibilit­y to find their own ways to keep needy people covered.

He points out what I explained in this space last week—that the House bill would give new tax breaks to higher-income persons based on their age while reducing tax advantages for the low-income working people Hutchinson wants to move

As we have seen, appearance­s matter more to Trump than anything real.

Beyond that, the state’s four Republican House members may find it politicall­y convenient to go along with their leadership as well as the superficia­l poll responses of their Trump-loving constituen­ts back home. That would mean voting for the bill. They don’t need the governor of their party making them out to be opponents of the people if they do.

All of that amounts to a microcosm, a very large and consequent­ial one, for Hutchinson’s entire governorsh­ip.

He appears to have adopted a broad theme and developed a sense of history for his governorsh­ip. It’s that he wants to modernize the place economical­ly. But that sometimes requires that the state moderate its extreme conservati­ve political instincts.

For example, Hutchinson’s party at home favors extreme social measures to discrimina­te against gays, lesbians and transgende­r persons. But those policies send a signal to national and internatio­nal corporate centers that Arkansas is a backward place unsuitable for the modern world and thus their expansion. Hutchinson thus tries to avoid, finesse, deflect or water down those measures.

His sponsorshi­p of the legislatio­n to separate the observance of Robert E. Lee’s birthday from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s risked offending the conservati­ve base that wants to honor the state’s heritage more than attend to its future. But, for the attempted modernizer in the governor’s office, it was about ridding the state of the self-imposed and utterly unnecessar­y black mark of a place that wouldn’t honor a civil rights leader without pairing him with the general who led the fight to save slavery.

Hutchinson’s modernizin­g efforts are ever-arduous and in one case of his own curious making.

He told me once that internatio­nal corporate executives look askance at the American death penalty. Yet he now proposes that Arkansas set a world land-speed record for official state barbarism by killing eight inmates in 10 days next month.

I suppose his thinking is that the death penalty is the law in Arkansas and we may as well get done with the killings that are ready to go, rather than spread them out.

If you must fall off the gubernator­ial high wire, one time is better than eight, and now is as good a time as later. I guess.

 ??  ?? John Brummett
John Brummett

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